M. Van Gils (1,2), J. Depauw (1), S. Verschuere (1,2), L. Nollet (1,2), O.M. Vanakker (1,2)
Affiliation(s):
1. Center For Medical Genetics, Ghent University Hospital;
2. Department Of Biomolecular Medicine, Ghent University
Introduction:  Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) is an autosomal recessive soft tissue  calcification disorder caused by biallelic mutations in ABCC6. In  patients decreased levels of inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) have been  linked to the formation of ectopic mineralizations. However, no data has  been reported on PPi levels in heterozygous carriers. Moreover, it is  unknown whether a correlation exists between PPi levels and the ABCC6  genotype or the phenotype of patients. 
Methods:  A total of 127 citrated blood samples (91 from 62 PXE patients, 22 from  21 carriers and 14 from 14 controls) was collected and processed. Plasma  PPi levels were measured via ATPase luminescence assays and samples  were internally calibrated. The ABCC6 gene was screened for variants.  The diagnosis of PXE was confirmed by the presence of 2 (likely)  pathogenic variants (scored as C3 to C5 according to Verschuere et al.  2020) and/or histopathological changes. PXE phenotypes were assessed  using the Phenodex scoring (PS) system at the time the first blood  sample was obtained for a patient.  Two sets of data were analyzed using SPSS26. First an analysis was  performed where all available samples were considered [Bulk].  Concomitantly, a smaller subset (i.e. the samples obtained at Phenodex  scoring [Single]) was analyzed. Differences in age, sex and PPi levels  between the 3 cohorts were analyzed via ANOVA and T-Test. Correlations  between PPi, PS, age and sex were analyzed via Spearman’s correlation  analysis. After samples were subdivided based on 3 mutation archetypes:  erroneous mRNA transcript (D: deletion, frameshift, splicing), nonsense  (N) and missense (M) variants, genotype-PPi correlations were assessed  via multiple ANOVA analyses based on more stringent variant selection  (C3 - C5, C3 [Subset Likely Pathogenic] - C5, C4 - C5, C5). 
Results:  Compared to controls, patients and carriers had respectively ±49% and  ±22% less PPi (P<0.001), though overlap in the sample ranges exists  between the groups. Interestingly, PPi levels were lower in males  compared to females in PXE patients (Bulk: P=0.011; Single: P=0.071),  but not in the other cohorts. No significant differences in age between  cohorts were observed; however, in the patient cohort PPi levels  increased significantly with age (P=0.0015, r=0.279). Moreover, a  significant inverse correlation between PPi levels and cardiac PS scores  was identified (P=0.041, r=-0.263) as well as a weak inverse  association between PPi and vascular PS (P=0.09). No correlation was  found with skin or eye symptoms. A significant difference in PPi levels  between D+M and N+M clusters was found during bulk, but not single,  analysis (P<0.01). 
Conclusion:  PPi plasma levels are significantly decreased in patients and carriers  and may thus also contribute to the subclinical or partial phenotype  seen in the latter. Importantly, there is a region of overlap between  both and with controls, suggesting PPi not to be the only relevant  pro-mineralization factor in at least a subset of PXE patients. In PXE  patients PPi levels appear to be influenced by sex and - to some extent  unexpectedly - significantly increase with age. Whether there is a solid  correlation with the ABCC6 genotype remains to be confirmed. Though  unrelated to skin and eye disease, the PPi levels are inversely  correlated with cardio(vascular) burden in PXE patients, making PPi  promising as a cardiovascular biomarker in PXE.  
Reference:  Verschuere et al. 2020: PMID 32873932